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  <title>Crafting Human™ Podcast</title>

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  <copyright>© 2026 Crafting Human™ Podcast</copyright>
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  <itunes:author>Sharon</itunes:author>
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  <description><![CDATA[<p>Crafting Human celebrates the creative brilliance of humans and the value of the soulful human touch expressed in the process of making, building and creating. Each week we have conversations with global creatives, makers, artisans, craftsmen, designers and storytellers, and we discuss how their work creates meaningful connections, distinctly shapes cultures and transforms communities &amp; ecosystems. Crafting Human is a quiet resistance to the values of the industrial mindset that erode and devalue humans in the creative process. Through each guest's stories and creative expressions, we restore attention to what cannot be automated: the human hand, the human process, and the human story, which reflect our identity and values, and shape our experiences. We are reclaiming agency, the value of our humanity and the priceless beauty of the "slow" work made with intention and soul.</p>]]></description>
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    <itunes:title>Crafting Human™ Ep. 12 | Feel Your Way: Will Ayers on Haptics, Imperfection &amp; What Design Forgets</itunes:title>
    <title>Crafting Human™ Ep. 12 | Feel Your Way: Will Ayers on Haptics, Imperfection &amp; What Design Forgets</title>
    <itunes:summary><![CDATA[The use of signs is disappearing. Cars are already driving themselves, and soon navigation may be something we stop looking at altogether.  For nearly a decade, Will Ayers, founder of Found, has been rethinking wayfinding and environmental graphics, building identity systems for some of the most recognizable spaces in tech and beyond across the world. His newest venture explores a haptic software technology that communicates directional wayfinding through touch alone. A tap on your right shou...]]></itunes:summary>
    <description><![CDATA[<p>The use of signs is disappearing. Cars are already driving themselves, and soon navigation may be something we stop looking at altogether.<br/><br/>For nearly a decade, Will Ayers, founder of Found, has been rethinking wayfinding and environmental graphics, building identity systems for some of the most recognizable spaces in tech and beyond across the world. His newest venture explores a haptic software technology that communicates directional wayfinding through touch alone. A tap on your right shoulder means right, a tap on your left means left. No screen. No voice. No shared language required.<br/><br/>In this episode of Crafting Human, we sit down to talk about what it means to design for a world where the visual infrastructure of cities begins to fall away, why intentional imperfection might be the antidote to a world starting to look the same everywhere, and how touch, the oldest interface we have, could become the most human technology left.<br/><br/>The conversation moves through:</p><ul><li>Why every glass tower in every city is starting to look the same and what craft can do about it</li><li>The case for intentional imperfection in an era of algorithmic sameness</li><li>How Will uses AI as a creative collaborator without handing over his judgment</li><li>Why the difference between precision and perfection matters more than ever</li><li>What design education must teach to equip the next generation to stay adaptable</li><li>The quiet radicalism of building technology that helps people feel more oriented, not less<br/><br/></li></ul><p>This is a conversation for anyone paying attention to how the built world is changing and wondering what gets lost, and what might be recovered, in the shift.</p>]]></description>
    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The use of signs is disappearing. Cars are already driving themselves, and soon navigation may be something we stop looking at altogether.<br/><br/>For nearly a decade, Will Ayers, founder of Found, has been rethinking wayfinding and environmental graphics, building identity systems for some of the most recognizable spaces in tech and beyond across the world. His newest venture explores a haptic software technology that communicates directional wayfinding through touch alone. A tap on your right shoulder means right, a tap on your left means left. No screen. No voice. No shared language required.<br/><br/>In this episode of Crafting Human, we sit down to talk about what it means to design for a world where the visual infrastructure of cities begins to fall away, why intentional imperfection might be the antidote to a world starting to look the same everywhere, and how touch, the oldest interface we have, could become the most human technology left.<br/><br/>The conversation moves through:</p><ul><li>Why every glass tower in every city is starting to look the same and what craft can do about it</li><li>The case for intentional imperfection in an era of algorithmic sameness</li><li>How Will uses AI as a creative collaborator without handing over his judgment</li><li>Why the difference between precision and perfection matters more than ever</li><li>What design education must teach to equip the next generation to stay adaptable</li><li>The quiet radicalism of building technology that helps people feel more oriented, not less<br/><br/></li></ul><p>This is a conversation for anyone paying attention to how the built world is changing and wondering what gets lost, and what might be recovered, in the shift.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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    <pubDate>Fri, 01 May 2026 12:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
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    <itunes:title>Crafting Human™ Episode 11 | Working with Nature to Regenerate Failing Systems</itunes:title>
    <title>Crafting Human™ Episode 11 | Working with Nature to Regenerate Failing Systems</title>
    <itunes:summary><![CDATA[Imagine a world where developers and communities are not at odds but sitting on the same side of the table, where a city addresses its housing shortage by restoring its wetlands instead of paving them, and where the place you live is one you truly know and feel a real sense of connection and belonging. In this episode of Crafting Human™, I sit down with Bill Reed, a pioneer of regenerative development, principal of Regenesis Group, and one of the founding voices behind the LEED Green Building...]]></itunes:summary>
    <description><![CDATA[<p>Imagine a world where developers and communities are not at odds but sitting on the same side of the table, where a city addresses its housing shortage by restoring its wetlands instead of paving them, and where the place you live is one you truly know and feel a real sense of connection and belonging.</p><p>In this episode of Crafting Human™, I sit down with Bill Reed, a pioneer of regenerative development, principal of Regenesis Group, and one of the founding voices behind the LEED Green Building movement.</p><p>He shares what regeneration actually means and how it is already taking shape in the world around us. Along the way, he points to a few ideas worth paying attention to:</p><p><b>Whole-system thinking that moves things forward.</b></p><p>Bill shares what becomes possible when we stop solving problems in isolation and begin working with the patterns of living systems, and why that shift opens up outcomes that fragmented approaches rarely reach.</p><p><b>A more enduring motivator than fear.</b></p><p>Love of place, it turns out, is far more sustaining than scarcity or guilt. We talk about what happens when communities organize around what they care about, rather than what they are pushing against.</p><p><b>Developers and residents on the same side.</b></p><p><b> </b><br/>Bill shares examples where both groups arrive at outcomes neither could have imagined alone. Communities gain more than expected, developers achieve fair returns, and the land itself is left healthier. These projects often move through approval eighteen months faster than conventional ones, and at a lower cost.</p><p><b>Reconnecting to the places we live</b>.</p><p>Bill shares why he believes place, not nation or state, is the scale where meaningful change actually happens, where people can care for something, and in turn, be shaped by it.</p><p>This is a conversation about what it looks like to design and build for a more human, more connected world, one where places are known and loved, where competing interests find harmony instead of settling for compromise, and where building the future feels less like resistance and more like belonging.</p><p>If you&apos;ve been looking for evidence that another way of living and working is not only possible, but already happening, this episode is for you.</p>]]></description>
    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Imagine a world where developers and communities are not at odds but sitting on the same side of the table, where a city addresses its housing shortage by restoring its wetlands instead of paving them, and where the place you live is one you truly know and feel a real sense of connection and belonging.</p><p>In this episode of Crafting Human™, I sit down with Bill Reed, a pioneer of regenerative development, principal of Regenesis Group, and one of the founding voices behind the LEED Green Building movement.</p><p>He shares what regeneration actually means and how it is already taking shape in the world around us. Along the way, he points to a few ideas worth paying attention to:</p><p><b>Whole-system thinking that moves things forward.</b></p><p>Bill shares what becomes possible when we stop solving problems in isolation and begin working with the patterns of living systems, and why that shift opens up outcomes that fragmented approaches rarely reach.</p><p><b>A more enduring motivator than fear.</b></p><p>Love of place, it turns out, is far more sustaining than scarcity or guilt. We talk about what happens when communities organize around what they care about, rather than what they are pushing against.</p><p><b>Developers and residents on the same side.</b></p><p><b> </b><br/>Bill shares examples where both groups arrive at outcomes neither could have imagined alone. Communities gain more than expected, developers achieve fair returns, and the land itself is left healthier. These projects often move through approval eighteen months faster than conventional ones, and at a lower cost.</p><p><b>Reconnecting to the places we live</b>.</p><p>Bill shares why he believes place, not nation or state, is the scale where meaningful change actually happens, where people can care for something, and in turn, be shaped by it.</p><p>This is a conversation about what it looks like to design and build for a more human, more connected world, one where places are known and loved, where competing interests find harmony instead of settling for compromise, and where building the future feels less like resistance and more like belonging.</p><p>If you&apos;ve been looking for evidence that another way of living and working is not only possible, but already happening, this episode is for you.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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    <itunes:author>Sharon</itunes:author>
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    <pubDate>Wed, 29 Apr 2026 10:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
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    <itunes:duration>4025</itunes:duration>
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    <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
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    <itunes:title>Crafting Human™ Episode 10 | What Home Really Means with Sandra Fadayel</itunes:title>
    <title>Crafting Human™ Episode 10 | What Home Really Means with Sandra Fadayel</title>
    <itunes:summary><![CDATA[When the place that once represented home is no longer, what does it look like to build it again, and not just the walls and rooms, but the deeper foundations home provides: safety, identity, belonging?  In this episode of Crafting Human, I sit down with my longtime friend and fellow Pratt alum Sandra Fadayel, founder of Inhabitat, a Dubai-based interior design studio whose mission reaches far beyond aesthetics. Sandra designs homes for global citizens and executives living across borders and...]]></itunes:summary>
    <description><![CDATA[<p>When the place that once represented home is no longer, what does it look like to build it again, and not just the walls and rooms, but the deeper foundations home provides: safety, identity, belonging?<br/><br/>In this episode of Crafting Human, I sit down with my longtime friend and fellow Pratt alum Sandra Fadayel, founder of Inhabitat, a Dubai-based interior design studio whose mission reaches far beyond aesthetics. Sandra designs homes for global citizens and executives living across borders and cultures to create spaces that reflect who they truly are and evoke the familiarity of home.<br/><br/>Sandra traces her design ethos and mission back to a defining moment in her youth, which was witnessing her grandmother return to the home in Palestine from which she was forcibly removed decades earlier. The experience planted a seed within her about the relationship between home and identity, one that would take years, and nine cities of her own, to fully understand.<br/><br/>Her art practice, which includes large-scale abstract paintings and her latest collection, Unmapped, explores those same themes of borders, belonging, and identity,  deeply personal ideas woven through both her creative work and her life story.<br/><br/>Together, we explore why people in crisis instinctively reach for objects that remind them who they are, why creativity requires room to breathe, and how inspiration often lives in the smallest moments like a slice of sky through a window or the bark of a tree on a morning walk.<br/><br/>This is a conversation about what it truly means to create home and how to protect creativity in a life shaped by movement and change.<br/><br/>New episodes of Crafting Human™ air every Thursday. Subscribe to the channel and join the Crafting Human creative community to stay connected.</p>]]></description>
    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>When the place that once represented home is no longer, what does it look like to build it again, and not just the walls and rooms, but the deeper foundations home provides: safety, identity, belonging?<br/><br/>In this episode of Crafting Human, I sit down with my longtime friend and fellow Pratt alum Sandra Fadayel, founder of Inhabitat, a Dubai-based interior design studio whose mission reaches far beyond aesthetics. Sandra designs homes for global citizens and executives living across borders and cultures to create spaces that reflect who they truly are and evoke the familiarity of home.<br/><br/>Sandra traces her design ethos and mission back to a defining moment in her youth, which was witnessing her grandmother return to the home in Palestine from which she was forcibly removed decades earlier. The experience planted a seed within her about the relationship between home and identity, one that would take years, and nine cities of her own, to fully understand.<br/><br/>Her art practice, which includes large-scale abstract paintings and her latest collection, Unmapped, explores those same themes of borders, belonging, and identity,  deeply personal ideas woven through both her creative work and her life story.<br/><br/>Together, we explore why people in crisis instinctively reach for objects that remind them who they are, why creativity requires room to breathe, and how inspiration often lives in the smallest moments like a slice of sky through a window or the bark of a tree on a morning walk.<br/><br/>This is a conversation about what it truly means to create home and how to protect creativity in a life shaped by movement and change.<br/><br/>New episodes of Crafting Human™ air every Thursday. Subscribe to the channel and join the Crafting Human creative community to stay connected.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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    <itunes:author>Sharon</itunes:author>
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    <pubDate>Thu, 23 Apr 2026 17:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
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    <itunes:duration>3050</itunes:duration>
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    <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
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    <itunes:title> Crafting Human™ Episode 9 | The Art of Caring: Why Investing in Artists Is a Social Strategy</itunes:title>
    <title> Crafting Human™ Episode 9 | The Art of Caring: Why Investing in Artists Is a Social Strategy</title>
    <itunes:summary><![CDATA[There are people in the world quietly doing something extraordinary: building systems of care around artists, the human beings who make culture possible.  Kathy Treat is one of them.  In 2008, Kathy founded the Speranza Foundation, which was born from her life experience where her musician friends were her lifeline during one of the hardest periods of her life. A  weekend recording session at a house on a country road showed her what became possible when artists were given time, space, a...]]></itunes:summary>
    <description><![CDATA[<p>There are people in the world quietly doing something extraordinary: building systems of care around artists, the human beings who make culture possible.<br/><br/>Kathy Treat is one of them.<br/><br/>In 2008, Kathy founded the Speranza Foundation, which was born from her life experience where her musician friends were her lifeline during one of the hardest periods of her life. A  weekend recording session at a house on a country road showed her what became possible when artists were given time, space, and genuine care, and ultimately empowered to become more fully who they are. That experience became the Lincoln City Fellowship: a living model built on the deeply held conviction that artists are not peripheral to society, but essential to it.<br/><br/>Joining her is Joey Borgogna, Executive Director of Speranza, who describes the artist&apos;s greatest gift to culture as &quot;the audacity to create in the midst of destruction — and still choose to find the beauty.&quot;<br/><br/>In this conversation we explore what it looks like to reimagine patronage from the ground up. And we explore why the investment in the person is always the investment in the work and how  artists, through their daily practice of curiosity, empathy, and sitting with uncomfortable questions &amp; in uncertainty model something the rest of us urgently need. Joey shares a raw and honest story illustrating how the mindset and approach to life between two artists from opposite sides of the world&apos;s most fractured conflict formed a bridge toward each other, rather than away, creating genuine love and friendship and a ripple effect in their respective communities.  <br/><br/>This is a conversation about care as strategy, and about people and humanity, before product. And it’s about why supporting artists and creatives may be one of the most generative, enduring, far-reaching investments we can make in the world right now.</p>]]></description>
    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>There are people in the world quietly doing something extraordinary: building systems of care around artists, the human beings who make culture possible.<br/><br/>Kathy Treat is one of them.<br/><br/>In 2008, Kathy founded the Speranza Foundation, which was born from her life experience where her musician friends were her lifeline during one of the hardest periods of her life. A  weekend recording session at a house on a country road showed her what became possible when artists were given time, space, and genuine care, and ultimately empowered to become more fully who they are. That experience became the Lincoln City Fellowship: a living model built on the deeply held conviction that artists are not peripheral to society, but essential to it.<br/><br/>Joining her is Joey Borgogna, Executive Director of Speranza, who describes the artist&apos;s greatest gift to culture as &quot;the audacity to create in the midst of destruction — and still choose to find the beauty.&quot;<br/><br/>In this conversation we explore what it looks like to reimagine patronage from the ground up. And we explore why the investment in the person is always the investment in the work and how  artists, through their daily practice of curiosity, empathy, and sitting with uncomfortable questions &amp; in uncertainty model something the rest of us urgently need. Joey shares a raw and honest story illustrating how the mindset and approach to life between two artists from opposite sides of the world&apos;s most fractured conflict formed a bridge toward each other, rather than away, creating genuine love and friendship and a ripple effect in their respective communities.  <br/><br/>This is a conversation about care as strategy, and about people and humanity, before product. And it’s about why supporting artists and creatives may be one of the most generative, enduring, far-reaching investments we can make in the world right now.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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    <itunes:author>Sharon</itunes:author>
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    <pubDate>Thu, 23 Apr 2026 17:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
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    <itunes:title>Crafting Human™ Ep. 8 | Water Has a Superpower and It&#39;s Working on You Right Now: Jim Garland on Water’s Impact</itunes:title>
    <title>Crafting Human™ Ep. 8 | Water Has a Superpower and It&#39;s Working on You Right Now: Jim Garland on Water’s Impact</title>
    <itunes:summary><![CDATA[Water has a superpower. You’ve felt it, even if you’ve never named it.  “It distracts us just enough that it opens us, and our minds move along different channels. Like a daydream. Like when you relax and suddenly think of what’s really important without trying to.”  These are words from Jim Garland, and he would know.  He has spent over three decades shaping water into experience, with work spanning the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Hearst Building, Longwood Gardens, and Water Tower Place ...]]></itunes:summary>
    <description><![CDATA[<p>Water has a superpower. You’ve felt it, even if you’ve never named it.<br/><br/>“It distracts us just enough that it opens us, and our minds move along different channels. Like a daydream. Like when you relax and suddenly think of what’s really important without trying to.”<br/><br/>These are words from Jim Garland, and he would know.<br/><br/>He has spent over three decades shaping water into experience, with work spanning the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Hearst Building, Longwood Gardens, and Water Tower Place in Chicago. He is one of the world’s leading water feature designers and the author of Fountain Safari, a 400-page exploration of how fountains have reflected civilization’s relationship with nature, beauty, and meaning from Imperial Rome to today.<br/><br/>And yet, this conversation isn’t really about fountains. It’s about attention, presence, and what happens to the human mind and the sense of embodiment that occurs when it encounters water’s movement, sounds, and glimmers. Something deep within us, where instinct and memory live begins to stir and shape what we feel.<br/><br/>And once you begin to notice it, you start to understand why we’re always drawn back to it.<br/><br/>In this episode of Crafting Human, we explore:<br/>→ The precision hidden inside beauty, how Bernini and his contemporaries crafted light, texture, and sound with extraordinary intentionality, and why &quot;very little is left to chance&quot; in the greatest fountains ever built<br/>→ What the Trevi Fountain and a shivering fountain in Hong Kong teach us about the difference between craft and accident<br/>→ Water as collaborator, why the best designers do not control water, they invite it, and what happens when you try to push it around too much<br/>→ Eastern vs. Western water, a fundamental philosophical divide in how cultures give water meaning, and what it reveals about beauty itself<br/>→ What makes a water feature soulful<br/>→ The three books that shaped Jim’s thinking, Moby Dick, Darwin’s Origin of Species, and Donald Judd’s art criticism<br/><br/>This is a conversation for designers, architects, creative practitioners, and for anyone who has ever paused beside a fountain and felt, without knowing why, more like themselves.<br/><br/>Crafting Human is a podcast about the people, practices, and philosophies behind extraordinary creative work, and what it means to make something that lasts.<br/><br/>Fountain Safari by Jim Garland, available now: https://oroeditions.com/product/fountain-safari <br/>Fluidity Design Consultants: https://www.fluidity-design.com/ <br/>Fluidity IG: https://www.instagram.com/fluidity_design_consultants/ </p><p>Watch the full episode on YouTube here:</p><p>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kXlP1oS7kw4&amp;t=53s</p>]]></description>
    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Water has a superpower. You’ve felt it, even if you’ve never named it.<br/><br/>“It distracts us just enough that it opens us, and our minds move along different channels. Like a daydream. Like when you relax and suddenly think of what’s really important without trying to.”<br/><br/>These are words from Jim Garland, and he would know.<br/><br/>He has spent over three decades shaping water into experience, with work spanning the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Hearst Building, Longwood Gardens, and Water Tower Place in Chicago. He is one of the world’s leading water feature designers and the author of Fountain Safari, a 400-page exploration of how fountains have reflected civilization’s relationship with nature, beauty, and meaning from Imperial Rome to today.<br/><br/>And yet, this conversation isn’t really about fountains. It’s about attention, presence, and what happens to the human mind and the sense of embodiment that occurs when it encounters water’s movement, sounds, and glimmers. Something deep within us, where instinct and memory live begins to stir and shape what we feel.<br/><br/>And once you begin to notice it, you start to understand why we’re always drawn back to it.<br/><br/>In this episode of Crafting Human, we explore:<br/>→ The precision hidden inside beauty, how Bernini and his contemporaries crafted light, texture, and sound with extraordinary intentionality, and why &quot;very little is left to chance&quot; in the greatest fountains ever built<br/>→ What the Trevi Fountain and a shivering fountain in Hong Kong teach us about the difference between craft and accident<br/>→ Water as collaborator, why the best designers do not control water, they invite it, and what happens when you try to push it around too much<br/>→ Eastern vs. Western water, a fundamental philosophical divide in how cultures give water meaning, and what it reveals about beauty itself<br/>→ What makes a water feature soulful<br/>→ The three books that shaped Jim’s thinking, Moby Dick, Darwin’s Origin of Species, and Donald Judd’s art criticism<br/><br/>This is a conversation for designers, architects, creative practitioners, and for anyone who has ever paused beside a fountain and felt, without knowing why, more like themselves.<br/><br/>Crafting Human is a podcast about the people, practices, and philosophies behind extraordinary creative work, and what it means to make something that lasts.<br/><br/>Fountain Safari by Jim Garland, available now: https://oroeditions.com/product/fountain-safari <br/>Fluidity Design Consultants: https://www.fluidity-design.com/ <br/>Fluidity IG: https://www.instagram.com/fluidity_design_consultants/ </p><p>Watch the full episode on YouTube here:</p><p>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kXlP1oS7kw4&amp;t=53s</p>]]></content:encoded>
    <enclosure url="https://www.buzzsprout.com/2571266/episodes/18916612-crafting-human-ep-8-water-has-a-superpower-and-it-s-working-on-you-right-now-jim-garland-on-water-s-impact.mp3" length="46191921" type="audio/mpeg" />
    <itunes:author>Sharon</itunes:author>
    <guid isPermaLink="false">Buzzsprout-18916612</guid>
    <pubDate>Fri, 27 Mar 2026 07:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
    <itunes:duration>3845</itunes:duration>
    <itunes:keywords></itunes:keywords>
    <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
    <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
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  <item>
    <itunes:title>Crafting Human™ Ep. 7 | Steven Cooper on The Kitchen As a Place Where Grief, Joy &amp; Identity Live</itunes:title>
    <title>Crafting Human™ Ep. 7 | Steven Cooper on The Kitchen As a Place Where Grief, Joy &amp; Identity Live</title>
    <itunes:summary><![CDATA[There's a room in your home that holds everything.  It’s the room where you learn that mistakes are okay and you’re encouraged to keep trying, the place that holds the grief that has nowhere else to go. It’s also the room where joyful celebrations spill into the hallway and where the traditions your grandmother never wrote down, because they lived in her hands, still echo through the walls.  Steven Cooper has spent the last forty years designing that room. As owner of Cooper Pacific Kitchens ...]]></itunes:summary>
    <description><![CDATA[<p>There&apos;s a room in your home that holds everything.<br/><br/>It’s the room where you learn that mistakes are okay and you’re encouraged to keep trying, the place that holds the grief that has nowhere else to go. It’s also the room where joyful celebrations spill into the hallway and where the traditions your grandmother never wrote down, because they lived in her hands, still echo through the walls.<br/><br/>Steven Cooper has spent the last forty years designing that room. As owner of Cooper Pacific Kitchens and a member of the La Cornue Global Design Council, Steven is one of the most respected voices in luxury kitchen design. Over four decades, he has developed a deep understanding of how kitchens shape the daily rhythms of a home and the incredible role they play in our lives.<br/><br/>In this conversation, we go far beyond design to explore how the spaces where we cook and gather shape our identities, carry our cultural memory, and hold the full weight of what it means to be human.<br/><br/>We talk about why natural materials matter and how they age with time in ways that reflect the lives lived around them. We consider the idea that the most powerful design is often invisible, felt more than noticed.<br/><br/>And we reflect on something surprisingly simple, that in a world accelerating toward artificial intelligence and convenience at rapid speed, the act of standing at a stove and making something with your hands can still be one of the most beautiful things we do.<br/><br/>This is Crafting Human, and a conversation that may very well change how you see the room you walk into every morning.</p><p>New episodes of Crafting Human™ air every Wednesday. Subscribe to our YouTube channel and join our creative community to stay connected.</p><p>Subscribe to the Crafting Human™ YouTube channel: <br/><br/><a href='http://www.youtube.com/@CraftingHuman-Media'><b>www.youtube.com/@CraftingHuman-Media</b></a></p><p>Join the Crafting Human creative tribe for updates on future conversations: <br/><br/><a href='http://craftinghuman.myflodesk.com/jointhecreativetribe'><b>craftinghuman.myflodesk.com/jointhecreativetribe</b></a> </p><p>Thank you for helping keep these conversations and this community alive.</p>]]></description>
    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>There&apos;s a room in your home that holds everything.<br/><br/>It’s the room where you learn that mistakes are okay and you’re encouraged to keep trying, the place that holds the grief that has nowhere else to go. It’s also the room where joyful celebrations spill into the hallway and where the traditions your grandmother never wrote down, because they lived in her hands, still echo through the walls.<br/><br/>Steven Cooper has spent the last forty years designing that room. As owner of Cooper Pacific Kitchens and a member of the La Cornue Global Design Council, Steven is one of the most respected voices in luxury kitchen design. Over four decades, he has developed a deep understanding of how kitchens shape the daily rhythms of a home and the incredible role they play in our lives.<br/><br/>In this conversation, we go far beyond design to explore how the spaces where we cook and gather shape our identities, carry our cultural memory, and hold the full weight of what it means to be human.<br/><br/>We talk about why natural materials matter and how they age with time in ways that reflect the lives lived around them. We consider the idea that the most powerful design is often invisible, felt more than noticed.<br/><br/>And we reflect on something surprisingly simple, that in a world accelerating toward artificial intelligence and convenience at rapid speed, the act of standing at a stove and making something with your hands can still be one of the most beautiful things we do.<br/><br/>This is Crafting Human, and a conversation that may very well change how you see the room you walk into every morning.</p><p>New episodes of Crafting Human™ air every Wednesday. Subscribe to our YouTube channel and join our creative community to stay connected.</p><p>Subscribe to the Crafting Human™ YouTube channel: <br/><br/><a href='http://www.youtube.com/@CraftingHuman-Media'><b>www.youtube.com/@CraftingHuman-Media</b></a></p><p>Join the Crafting Human creative tribe for updates on future conversations: <br/><br/><a href='http://craftinghuman.myflodesk.com/jointhecreativetribe'><b>craftinghuman.myflodesk.com/jointhecreativetribe</b></a> </p><p>Thank you for helping keep these conversations and this community alive.</p>]]></content:encoded>
    <enclosure url="https://www.buzzsprout.com/2571266/episodes/18840089-crafting-human-ep-7-steven-cooper-on-the-kitchen-as-a-place-where-grief-joy-identity-live.mp3" length="39560446" type="audio/mpeg" />
    <itunes:author>Sharon</itunes:author>
    <guid isPermaLink="false">Buzzsprout-18840089</guid>
    <pubDate>Fri, 13 Mar 2026 03:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
    <itunes:duration>3292</itunes:duration>
    <itunes:keywords></itunes:keywords>
    <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
    <itunes:episode>7</itunes:episode>
    <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
    <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
  </item>
  <item>
    <itunes:title>Crafting Human™ Ep. 6 | Garrett Robbins on Storytelling, Cultural Memory, and Andaz Prague</itunes:title>
    <title>Crafting Human™ Ep. 6 | Garrett Robbins on Storytelling, Cultural Memory, and Andaz Prague</title>
    <itunes:summary><![CDATA[On this episode of Crafting Human, I sit down with interior designer Garrett Robbins, co-founder of Brime Robbins, for a conversation about cultural heritage, storytelling, and the role design can play in reflecting a sense of identity and enabling a deeper connection to community and culture. Garrett shares the design inspiration behind the award-winning Andaz Prague project, a hotel design concept shaped by Czech myths and legends passed down through generations. Together, we explore how a ...]]></itunes:summary>
    <description><![CDATA[<p>On this episode of Crafting Human, I sit down with interior designer Garrett Robbins, co-founder of Brime Robbins, for a conversation about cultural heritage, storytelling, and the role design can play in reflecting a sense of identity and enabling a deeper connection to community and culture.</p><p>Garrett shares the design inspiration behind the award-winning Andaz Prague project, a hotel design concept shaped by Czech myths and legends passed down through generations. Together, we explore how a narrative can anchor design decisions, how integrated art can bring a space to life, and what it means to create hospitality environments with depth, meaning, and emotional resonance.</p><p>We talk about what happens when a building becomes a vessel for shared memory, when craftsmanship bridges generations, and when a hotel becomes a place that helps people remember who they are and where they come from. </p><p>Crafting Human™ is a space for conversations that go beyond aesthetics to explore what it means to create and to remain human in a world increasingly shaped by automation and optimization.</p><p>In this episode:</p><p>– Storytelling as the anchor for design decisions</p><p>– Cultural memory and myth as design inspiration</p><p>– Integrated art and collaboration with local artists and artisans</p><p>– Hospitality as a space for shared meaning and emotional connection</p><p>– How Garrett thinks about AI, creativity, and the role of soul in design</p><p>You can explore Garrett’s work here:</p><p>Website: <a href='https://www.brimerobbins.com/'>https://www.brimerobbins.com/</a> </p><p>Instagram: <a href='https://www.instagram.com/brimerobbins/?hl=en'>https://www.instagram.com/brimerobbins/?hl=en</a> </p><p>New episodes of Crafting Human™ air every Thursday. Subscribe to the channel and join the Crafting Human creative community to stay connected.</p><p><br/></p>]]></description>
    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>On this episode of Crafting Human, I sit down with interior designer Garrett Robbins, co-founder of Brime Robbins, for a conversation about cultural heritage, storytelling, and the role design can play in reflecting a sense of identity and enabling a deeper connection to community and culture.</p><p>Garrett shares the design inspiration behind the award-winning Andaz Prague project, a hotel design concept shaped by Czech myths and legends passed down through generations. Together, we explore how a narrative can anchor design decisions, how integrated art can bring a space to life, and what it means to create hospitality environments with depth, meaning, and emotional resonance.</p><p>We talk about what happens when a building becomes a vessel for shared memory, when craftsmanship bridges generations, and when a hotel becomes a place that helps people remember who they are and where they come from. </p><p>Crafting Human™ is a space for conversations that go beyond aesthetics to explore what it means to create and to remain human in a world increasingly shaped by automation and optimization.</p><p>In this episode:</p><p>– Storytelling as the anchor for design decisions</p><p>– Cultural memory and myth as design inspiration</p><p>– Integrated art and collaboration with local artists and artisans</p><p>– Hospitality as a space for shared meaning and emotional connection</p><p>– How Garrett thinks about AI, creativity, and the role of soul in design</p><p>You can explore Garrett’s work here:</p><p>Website: <a href='https://www.brimerobbins.com/'>https://www.brimerobbins.com/</a> </p><p>Instagram: <a href='https://www.instagram.com/brimerobbins/?hl=en'>https://www.instagram.com/brimerobbins/?hl=en</a> </p><p>New episodes of Crafting Human™ air every Thursday. Subscribe to the channel and join the Crafting Human creative community to stay connected.</p><p><br/></p>]]></content:encoded>
    <enclosure url="https://www.buzzsprout.com/2571266/episodes/18835870-crafting-human-ep-6-garrett-robbins-on-storytelling-cultural-memory-and-andaz-prague.mp3" length="43170348" type="audio/mpeg" />
    <itunes:author>Sharon</itunes:author>
    <guid isPermaLink="false">Buzzsprout-18835870</guid>
    <pubDate>Fri, 13 Mar 2026 02:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
    <itunes:duration>3593</itunes:duration>
    <itunes:keywords></itunes:keywords>
    <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
    <itunes:episode>6</itunes:episode>
    <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
    <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
  </item>
  <item>
    <itunes:title>Crafting Human™ Ep. 5 | David Leventhal on Designing Business as a Living System</itunes:title>
    <title>Crafting Human™ Ep. 5 | David Leventhal on Designing Business as a Living System</title>
    <itunes:summary><![CDATA[On this episode of Crafting Human™, I sit down with David Leventhal, founder of Playa Viva, a regenerative luxury destination resort, for a conversation about regeneration, adaptability, and what it means to design business as a living system. What began as a conventional real estate development shifted course after the 2008 financial collapse. Instead of simply trying to repair a broken model, David and his team stepped back to ask a deeper question: What future are we actually trying to cre...]]></itunes:summary>
    <description><![CDATA[<p>On this episode of Crafting Human™, I sit down with David Leventhal, founder of Playa Viva, a regenerative luxury destination resort, for a conversation about regeneration, adaptability, and what it means to design business as a living system.</p><p>What began as a conventional real estate development shifted course after the 2008 financial collapse. Instead of simply trying to repair a broken model, David and his team stepped back to ask a deeper question: What future are we actually trying to create?</p><p>Drawing from decades of work in conservation, hospitality, and systems thinking, David shares how Playa Viva evolved into a regenerative destination built on stewardship, community partnership, and whole-systems design. We explore how land, economy, culture, and environment are not separate concerns and why meaningful regeneration requires addressing social and economic realities alongside ecological ones.</p><p>Together, we reflect on creative adaptability and the courage to release a plan, to listen deeply to place, and to allow a paradigm shift to unfold.</p><p>Crafting Human™ is a space for conversations that go beyond design and business strategy to explore what it means to create, to lead, and to remain deeply human in a rapidly changing world.</p><p>In this episode:</p><p> – What regeneration really means beyond sustainability<br/> – The paradigm shift from scarcity to abundance thinking<br/> – Why you can’t regenerate land without addressing economic poverty<br/> – How adaptability shapes both design and business<br/> – Building toward a shared future instead of solving isolated problems</p><p>You can explore David’s work here:<br/> Playa Viva: playaviva.com</p><p>New episodes of Crafting Human™ air every Wednesday. Subscribe to the channel and join our creative community to stay connected.</p><p>www.youtube.com/@CraftingHuman-Media</p><p><br/></p>]]></description>
    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>On this episode of Crafting Human™, I sit down with David Leventhal, founder of Playa Viva, a regenerative luxury destination resort, for a conversation about regeneration, adaptability, and what it means to design business as a living system.</p><p>What began as a conventional real estate development shifted course after the 2008 financial collapse. Instead of simply trying to repair a broken model, David and his team stepped back to ask a deeper question: What future are we actually trying to create?</p><p>Drawing from decades of work in conservation, hospitality, and systems thinking, David shares how Playa Viva evolved into a regenerative destination built on stewardship, community partnership, and whole-systems design. We explore how land, economy, culture, and environment are not separate concerns and why meaningful regeneration requires addressing social and economic realities alongside ecological ones.</p><p>Together, we reflect on creative adaptability and the courage to release a plan, to listen deeply to place, and to allow a paradigm shift to unfold.</p><p>Crafting Human™ is a space for conversations that go beyond design and business strategy to explore what it means to create, to lead, and to remain deeply human in a rapidly changing world.</p><p>In this episode:</p><p> – What regeneration really means beyond sustainability<br/> – The paradigm shift from scarcity to abundance thinking<br/> – Why you can’t regenerate land without addressing economic poverty<br/> – How adaptability shapes both design and business<br/> – Building toward a shared future instead of solving isolated problems</p><p>You can explore David’s work here:<br/> Playa Viva: playaviva.com</p><p>New episodes of Crafting Human™ air every Wednesday. Subscribe to the channel and join our creative community to stay connected.</p><p>www.youtube.com/@CraftingHuman-Media</p><p><br/></p>]]></content:encoded>
    <enclosure url="https://www.buzzsprout.com/2571266/episodes/18708975-crafting-human-ep-5-david-leventhal-on-designing-business-as-a-living-system.mp3" length="46763941" type="audio/mpeg" />
    <itunes:author>Sharon</itunes:author>
    <guid isPermaLink="false">Buzzsprout-18708975</guid>
    <pubDate>Wed, 18 Feb 2026 19:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
    <itunes:duration>3893</itunes:duration>
    <itunes:keywords></itunes:keywords>
    <itunes:episode>5</itunes:episode>
    <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
    <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
  </item>
  <item>
    <itunes:title>Crafting Human™ Ep. 4 | Susan Magsamen &amp; Ivy Ross on How Art Changes the Brain</itunes:title>
    <title>Crafting Human™ Ep. 4 | Susan Magsamen &amp; Ivy Ross on How Art Changes the Brain</title>
    <itunes:summary><![CDATA[On this episode of Crafting Human™, I sit down with Susan Magsamen and Ivy Ross, authors of Your Brain on Art, for a conversation about how the arts and aesthetics shape us, emotionally, physically, and neurologically. Drawing from neuroscience, lived experience, and the emerging field of neuroaesthetics, Susan and Ivy explore how engaging our senses through art, beauty, design, movement, and sound can rewire the brain, support well-being, and deepen our capacity for empathy and meaning. Toge...]]></itunes:summary>
    <description><![CDATA[<p>On this episode of Crafting Human™, I sit down with Susan Magsamen and Ivy Ross, authors of Your Brain on Art, for a conversation about how the arts and aesthetics shape us, emotionally, physically, and neurologically.</p><p>Drawing from neuroscience, lived experience, and the emerging field of neuroaesthetics, Susan and Ivy explore how engaging our senses through art, beauty, design, movement, and sound can rewire the brain, support well-being, and deepen our capacity for empathy and meaning.</p><p>Together, we reflect on what it means to live as embodied human beings in a world often oriented toward speed, efficiency, and constant production, and why the arts are not an extra, but essential to our humanity.</p><p>Crafting Human™ is a space for conversations that go beyond aesthetics to explore what it means to create, to lead, and to remain human in a world increasingly shaped by optimization and automation.</p><p>In this episode:</p><p>– How art and aesthetics influence the brain and body</p><p>– The science behind neuroplasticity and sensory engagement</p><p>– Why meaning, empathy, and creativity deepen through the arts</p><p>– What it means to cultivate an aesthetic mindset in everyday life</p><p>– Moving beyond survival toward a more flourishing way of living</p><p>You can explore Susan and Ivy’s work here:</p><p>Website: yourbrainonart.com</p><p>Instagram: @yourbrainonart</p><p>New episodes of Crafting Human™ air every Wednesday. Subscribe to the channel and join the Crafting Human creative community to stay connected.</p><p>Subscribe to the Crafting Human YouTube channel here: <br/><a href='http://www.youtube.com/@CraftingHuman-Media'>www.youtube.com/@CraftingHuman-Media</a> <br/><br/>Join our creative tribe for updates on future conversations: <br/><a href='https://www.youtube.com/redirect?event=comments&amp;redir_token=QUFFLUhqbWhTd0hST0lHVzlNYnhxVTQ5U1ZJTVN5U1U1QXxBQ3Jtc0ttSXQ2VWFsWVRmdjZJOVhERTI1R2JlQkVxTWlHQTNNRjV4WFNDa3dEQzJSOUV1VUh0bHVhVjctZGtXck1fclBRV2ZrOU85WDh0SWFpem9rUWlFRHZsY2R0OTlvTHBJNlNCcnBQaEZScWU4WFFQdFhrOA&amp;q=http%3A%2F%2Fcraftinghuman.myflodesk.com%2Fjointhecreativetribe'>craftinghuman.myflodesk.com/jointhecreativetribe</a> <br/><br/>Thank you for helping keep these conversations and this community  alive.<br/><br/>- Sharon</p><p><br/></p>]]></description>
    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>On this episode of Crafting Human™, I sit down with Susan Magsamen and Ivy Ross, authors of Your Brain on Art, for a conversation about how the arts and aesthetics shape us, emotionally, physically, and neurologically.</p><p>Drawing from neuroscience, lived experience, and the emerging field of neuroaesthetics, Susan and Ivy explore how engaging our senses through art, beauty, design, movement, and sound can rewire the brain, support well-being, and deepen our capacity for empathy and meaning.</p><p>Together, we reflect on what it means to live as embodied human beings in a world often oriented toward speed, efficiency, and constant production, and why the arts are not an extra, but essential to our humanity.</p><p>Crafting Human™ is a space for conversations that go beyond aesthetics to explore what it means to create, to lead, and to remain human in a world increasingly shaped by optimization and automation.</p><p>In this episode:</p><p>– How art and aesthetics influence the brain and body</p><p>– The science behind neuroplasticity and sensory engagement</p><p>– Why meaning, empathy, and creativity deepen through the arts</p><p>– What it means to cultivate an aesthetic mindset in everyday life</p><p>– Moving beyond survival toward a more flourishing way of living</p><p>You can explore Susan and Ivy’s work here:</p><p>Website: yourbrainonart.com</p><p>Instagram: @yourbrainonart</p><p>New episodes of Crafting Human™ air every Wednesday. Subscribe to the channel and join the Crafting Human creative community to stay connected.</p><p>Subscribe to the Crafting Human YouTube channel here: <br/><a href='http://www.youtube.com/@CraftingHuman-Media'>www.youtube.com/@CraftingHuman-Media</a> <br/><br/>Join our creative tribe for updates on future conversations: <br/><a href='https://www.youtube.com/redirect?event=comments&amp;redir_token=QUFFLUhqbWhTd0hST0lHVzlNYnhxVTQ5U1ZJTVN5U1U1QXxBQ3Jtc0ttSXQ2VWFsWVRmdjZJOVhERTI1R2JlQkVxTWlHQTNNRjV4WFNDa3dEQzJSOUV1VUh0bHVhVjctZGtXck1fclBRV2ZrOU85WDh0SWFpem9rUWlFRHZsY2R0OTlvTHBJNlNCcnBQaEZScWU4WFFQdFhrOA&amp;q=http%3A%2F%2Fcraftinghuman.myflodesk.com%2Fjointhecreativetribe'>craftinghuman.myflodesk.com/jointhecreativetribe</a> <br/><br/>Thank you for helping keep these conversations and this community  alive.<br/><br/>- Sharon</p><p><br/></p>]]></content:encoded>
    <enclosure url="https://www.buzzsprout.com/2571266/episodes/18666741-crafting-human-ep-4-susan-magsamen-ivy-ross-on-how-art-changes-the-brain.mp3" length="36340455" type="audio/mpeg" />
    <itunes:author>Sharon</itunes:author>
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    <pubDate>Wed, 11 Feb 2026 18:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
    <itunes:duration>3024</itunes:duration>
    <itunes:keywords></itunes:keywords>
    <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
    <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
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  <item>
    <itunes:title>Crafting Human™ Ep. 3 | Thomas Lavin on Building a Business That Champions Makers</itunes:title>
    <title>Crafting Human™ Ep. 3 | Thomas Lavin on Building a Business That Champions Makers</title>
    <itunes:summary><![CDATA[On this episode of Crafting Human™, I sit down with Thomas Lavin, Founder and CEO of Thomas Lavin Showroom, for a conversation about craft, stewardship, and the responsibility of building a business around makers. Over nearly three decades, Thomas has championed artisans and designers by prioritizing long-term relationships, education, and storytelling over speed or trend. Together, we explore what it means to represent handmade work in an age shaped by mass production and why craft continues...]]></itunes:summary>
    <description><![CDATA[<p>On this episode of Crafting Human™, I sit down with Thomas Lavin, Founder and CEO of Thomas Lavin Showroom, for a conversation about craft, stewardship, and the responsibility of building a business around makers.</p><p>Over nearly three decades, Thomas has championed artisans and designers by prioritizing long-term relationships, education, and storytelling over speed or trend. Together, we explore what it means to represent handmade work in an age shaped by mass production and why craft continues to matter as a commitment to our shared humanity.</p><p>Crafting Human™ is a space for conversations that go beyond aesthetics to explore what it means to create, and to remain human, in a world increasingly shaped by automation and optimization.</p><p>In this episode:<br/>– Championing makers through long-term stewardship<br/>– Craft in the age of mass production and technology<br/>– Why handmade work creates emotional connection<br/>– The role of showrooms as places of education and culture<br/>– What it means to build a business with care and responsibility</p><p>You can explore Thomas Lavin’s work here:<br/>Website:<a href='https://www.thomaslavin.com'> https://www.thomaslavin.com<br/></a>Instagram: <a href='https://www.instagram.com/the.real.thomas.lavin/?hl=en'>@the.real.thomas.lavin</a></p><p>New episodes of Crafting Human™ air every Wednesday. Subscribe to the channel and join the Crafting Human creative community to stay connected.</p>]]></description>
    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>On this episode of Crafting Human™, I sit down with Thomas Lavin, Founder and CEO of Thomas Lavin Showroom, for a conversation about craft, stewardship, and the responsibility of building a business around makers.</p><p>Over nearly three decades, Thomas has championed artisans and designers by prioritizing long-term relationships, education, and storytelling over speed or trend. Together, we explore what it means to represent handmade work in an age shaped by mass production and why craft continues to matter as a commitment to our shared humanity.</p><p>Crafting Human™ is a space for conversations that go beyond aesthetics to explore what it means to create, and to remain human, in a world increasingly shaped by automation and optimization.</p><p>In this episode:<br/>– Championing makers through long-term stewardship<br/>– Craft in the age of mass production and technology<br/>– Why handmade work creates emotional connection<br/>– The role of showrooms as places of education and culture<br/>– What it means to build a business with care and responsibility</p><p>You can explore Thomas Lavin’s work here:<br/>Website:<a href='https://www.thomaslavin.com'> https://www.thomaslavin.com<br/></a>Instagram: <a href='https://www.instagram.com/the.real.thomas.lavin/?hl=en'>@the.real.thomas.lavin</a></p><p>New episodes of Crafting Human™ air every Wednesday. Subscribe to the channel and join the Crafting Human creative community to stay connected.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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    <itunes:author>Sharon</itunes:author>
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    <pubDate>Mon, 09 Feb 2026 20:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
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    <itunes:title>Crafting Human™ Ep. 2 | Valerie Legras &amp; Morgane Baroghel-Crucq on Craft as Remedy to Disconnection</itunes:title>
    <title>Crafting Human™ Ep. 2 | Valerie Legras &amp; Morgane Baroghel-Crucq on Craft as Remedy to Disconnection</title>
    <itunes:summary><![CDATA[On this episode of Crafting Human™, designer Valerie Legras and fibre artist Morgane Baroghel-Crucq reflect on craft as a form of embodied intelligence, one that lives in the hands, the body, and the process of making itself. Together, we explore how slowness, care, and making in alignment with nature and its natural rhythms shape not only objects, but the meaning they carry. This conversation moves beyond skill-building to consider how objects, spaces, and rituals hold memory and how meaning...]]></itunes:summary>
    <description><![CDATA[<p>On this episode of Crafting Human™, designer Valerie Legras and fibre artist Morgane Baroghel-Crucq reflect on craft as a form of embodied intelligence, one that lives in the hands, the body, and the process of making itself.</p><p>Together, we explore how slowness, care, and making in alignment with nature and its natural rhythms shape not only objects, but the meaning they carry. This conversation moves beyond skill-building to consider how objects, spaces, and rituals hold memory and how meaning emerges through process, not just output.<br/><br/>Crafting Human™ is a space for conversations that go beyond aesthetics to explore what it means to create in a world increasingly shaped by speed and automation.<br/><br/>In this episode:<br/> – Craft as intelligence made visible<br/> – Slowness as care, not inefficiency<br/> – Objects, spaces, and rituals as carriers of memory<br/> – Why meaning is found in process, not just outcome<br/><br/>You can explore their work here:<br/><br/>Valerie Legras <br/>Website: www.swadoh.com/manifesto<br/>Instagram: @_swadoh_<br/><br/>Morgane Baroghel-Crucq<br/>Website: www.morganebaroghel-crucq.com<br/>Instagram: @morganebaroghelcrucq<br/><br/>New episodes of Crafting Human™ air every Wednesday. Subscribe to the podcast and join the Crafting Human creative community to stay connected.</p>]]></description>
    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>On this episode of Crafting Human™, designer Valerie Legras and fibre artist Morgane Baroghel-Crucq reflect on craft as a form of embodied intelligence, one that lives in the hands, the body, and the process of making itself.</p><p>Together, we explore how slowness, care, and making in alignment with nature and its natural rhythms shape not only objects, but the meaning they carry. This conversation moves beyond skill-building to consider how objects, spaces, and rituals hold memory and how meaning emerges through process, not just output.<br/><br/>Crafting Human™ is a space for conversations that go beyond aesthetics to explore what it means to create in a world increasingly shaped by speed and automation.<br/><br/>In this episode:<br/> – Craft as intelligence made visible<br/> – Slowness as care, not inefficiency<br/> – Objects, spaces, and rituals as carriers of memory<br/> – Why meaning is found in process, not just outcome<br/><br/>You can explore their work here:<br/><br/>Valerie Legras <br/>Website: www.swadoh.com/manifesto<br/>Instagram: @_swadoh_<br/><br/>Morgane Baroghel-Crucq<br/>Website: www.morganebaroghel-crucq.com<br/>Instagram: @morganebaroghelcrucq<br/><br/>New episodes of Crafting Human™ air every Wednesday. Subscribe to the podcast and join the Crafting Human creative community to stay connected.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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    <itunes:author>Sharon</itunes:author>
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    <pubDate>Wed, 28 Jan 2026 19:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
    <itunes:duration>4488</itunes:duration>
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    <itunes:title>Crafting Human™ Ep. 2 Teaser | Objects Used to Have Soul...What Happened?</itunes:title>
    <title>Crafting Human™ Ep. 2 Teaser | Objects Used to Have Soul...What Happened?</title>
    <itunes:summary><![CDATA[What happens when we stop teaching people how to make things? On Crafting Human, next Wednesday, 1/28, join me for a fascinating conversation with Valerie Legras, Founder &amp; Creative Director of SWADOH design studio, and Morgane Baroghel-Crucq, a French fibre artist and artisan. We are having a conversation about craft, independence, and what’s lost when knowledge isn’t passed down. We reflect on the ideas of: Craft being intelligence made visible.Slowness is not inefficiency, but care and...]]></itunes:summary>
    <description><![CDATA[<p>What happens when we stop teaching people how to make things?</p><p>On Crafting Human, next Wednesday, 1/28, join me for a fascinating conversation with Valerie Legras, Founder &amp; Creative Director of SWADOH design studio, and Morgane Baroghel-Crucq, a French fibre artist and artisan. We are having a conversation about craft, independence, and what’s lost when knowledge isn’t passed down.</p><p>We reflect on the ideas of:</p><ul><li>Craft being intelligence made visible.</li><li>Slowness is not inefficiency, but care and aligning with the natural rhythms of life.</li><li>Objects, spaces, and rituals carry memory.</li><li>Meaning emerges through process, not just output.</li></ul>]]></description>
    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>What happens when we stop teaching people how to make things?</p><p>On Crafting Human, next Wednesday, 1/28, join me for a fascinating conversation with Valerie Legras, Founder &amp; Creative Director of SWADOH design studio, and Morgane Baroghel-Crucq, a French fibre artist and artisan. We are having a conversation about craft, independence, and what’s lost when knowledge isn’t passed down.</p><p>We reflect on the ideas of:</p><ul><li>Craft being intelligence made visible.</li><li>Slowness is not inefficiency, but care and aligning with the natural rhythms of life.</li><li>Objects, spaces, and rituals carry memory.</li><li>Meaning emerges through process, not just output.</li></ul>]]></content:encoded>
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    <itunes:author>Sharon</itunes:author>
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    <pubDate>Thu, 22 Jan 2026 20:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
    <itunes:duration>48</itunes:duration>
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    <itunes:title>Crafting Human™ Ep. 1 | Gabriel Islas on Letting Go To Find Creative Courage &amp; Growth</itunes:title>
    <title>Crafting Human™ Ep. 1 | Gabriel Islas on Letting Go To Find Creative Courage &amp; Growth</title>
    <itunes:summary><![CDATA[On this episode of Crafting Human™, painter and educator Gabriel Islas reflects on plein air painting: working in the landscape where weather, time, discomfort, and imperfection shape both the process and the outcome.   Together, we explore his journey and growth as an artist, which has taught him to trust in the moments and process, even when the scale or stakes felt intimidating.  Crafting Human™ is a space for conversations that go beyond aesthetics to explore what it means to create ...]]></itunes:summary>
    <description><![CDATA[<p>On this episode of Crafting Human™, painter and educator Gabriel Islas reflects on plein air painting: working in the landscape where weather, time, discomfort, and imperfection shape both the process and the outcome. <br/><br/>Together, we explore his journey and growth as an artist, which has taught him to trust in the moments and process, even when the scale or stakes felt intimidating.<br/><br/>Crafting Human™ is a space for conversations that go beyond aesthetics to explore what it means to create and cultivate our humanity in a world increasingly shaped by speed and automation.<br/><br/>In this episode:<br/>– Discomfort as a catalyst for creative growth<br/>– Letting go of perfection in the making process<br/>– Presence, imperfection, and working with place<br/><br/>You can explore Gabriel’s work here:<br/>Website: gabrielislasart.com<br/>Instagram: @gabriel_islas_art<br/><br/>New episodes of Crafting Human™ air every Wednesday. Subscribe to the podcast and join the Crafting Human creative tribe at the link below.<br/><br/>craftinghuman.myflodesk.com/jointhecreativetribe</p>]]></description>
    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>On this episode of Crafting Human™, painter and educator Gabriel Islas reflects on plein air painting: working in the landscape where weather, time, discomfort, and imperfection shape both the process and the outcome. <br/><br/>Together, we explore his journey and growth as an artist, which has taught him to trust in the moments and process, even when the scale or stakes felt intimidating.<br/><br/>Crafting Human™ is a space for conversations that go beyond aesthetics to explore what it means to create and cultivate our humanity in a world increasingly shaped by speed and automation.<br/><br/>In this episode:<br/>– Discomfort as a catalyst for creative growth<br/>– Letting go of perfection in the making process<br/>– Presence, imperfection, and working with place<br/><br/>You can explore Gabriel’s work here:<br/>Website: gabrielislasart.com<br/>Instagram: @gabriel_islas_art<br/><br/>New episodes of Crafting Human™ air every Wednesday. Subscribe to the podcast and join the Crafting Human creative tribe at the link below.<br/><br/>craftinghuman.myflodesk.com/jointhecreativetribe</p>]]></content:encoded>
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    <itunes:author>Sharon</itunes:author>
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    <pubDate>Thu, 22 Jan 2026 20:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
    <itunes:duration>2666</itunes:duration>
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    <itunes:title>Introducing Crafting Human™ | Crafting Human In the Age of AI</itunes:title>
    <title>Introducing Crafting Human™ | Crafting Human In the Age of AI</title>
    <itunes:summary><![CDATA[As technology accelerates speed, scale, and efficiency, many of us are left asking deeper questions: what does it mean to be human in a world increasingly shaped by machines?  Hosted by designer and creative leader Sharon Yu, Crafting Human™ podcast celebrates the humans behind the work: the artists, makers, designers, craftsmen, and storytellers whose creativity shapes how we experience culture, community, and ourselves.  Each week, conversations go beyond output and aesthetics to explore th...]]></itunes:summary>
    <description><![CDATA[<p>As technology accelerates speed, scale, and efficiency, many of us are left asking deeper questions: what does it mean to be human in a world increasingly shaped by machines?<br/><br/>Hosted by designer and creative leader Sharon Yu, Crafting Human™ podcast celebrates the humans behind the work: the artists, makers, designers, craftsmen, and storytellers whose creativity shapes how we experience culture, community, and ourselves.<br/><br/>Each week, conversations go beyond output and aesthetics to explore the uniquely human perspectives, lived experiences, and creative processes that give depth and soul to what we make. We look at who we are beneath our professions, how creativity reflects our humanity, and why the human touch still matters.<br/><br/>Across each episode, we meet emerging artists and established creatives from around the world, going behind the scenes of their work to understand how meaning and purpose emerge through process and how creativity serves the communities around us.<br/><br/>We also explore the evolving role of technology and AI, not as a replacement for human creativity, but as a tool that reveals what we value, what we fear, and what we must remember.<br/><br/>Crafting Human™ is a space for reflection, curiosity, and connection and an invitation to rediscover the stories that make us, us.<br/><br/>New episodes every Wednesday. </p><p><b>If you’d like to watch the Crafting Human™ trailer and subscribe on YouTube, you can find it </b><a href='https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CgcHhJu9DTA'><b>here</b></a><b>.<br/></b><br/><b>And if you feel called to stay connected, you’re warmly invited to join the Crafting Human creative tribe </b><a href='https://craftinghuman.myflodesk.com/jointhecreativetribe'><b>here</b></a><b>.</b></p>]]></description>
    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>As technology accelerates speed, scale, and efficiency, many of us are left asking deeper questions: what does it mean to be human in a world increasingly shaped by machines?<br/><br/>Hosted by designer and creative leader Sharon Yu, Crafting Human™ podcast celebrates the humans behind the work: the artists, makers, designers, craftsmen, and storytellers whose creativity shapes how we experience culture, community, and ourselves.<br/><br/>Each week, conversations go beyond output and aesthetics to explore the uniquely human perspectives, lived experiences, and creative processes that give depth and soul to what we make. We look at who we are beneath our professions, how creativity reflects our humanity, and why the human touch still matters.<br/><br/>Across each episode, we meet emerging artists and established creatives from around the world, going behind the scenes of their work to understand how meaning and purpose emerge through process and how creativity serves the communities around us.<br/><br/>We also explore the evolving role of technology and AI, not as a replacement for human creativity, but as a tool that reveals what we value, what we fear, and what we must remember.<br/><br/>Crafting Human™ is a space for reflection, curiosity, and connection and an invitation to rediscover the stories that make us, us.<br/><br/>New episodes every Wednesday. </p><p><b>If you’d like to watch the Crafting Human™ trailer and subscribe on YouTube, you can find it </b><a href='https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CgcHhJu9DTA'><b>here</b></a><b>.<br/></b><br/><b>And if you feel called to stay connected, you’re warmly invited to join the Crafting Human creative tribe </b><a href='https://craftinghuman.myflodesk.com/jointhecreativetribe'><b>here</b></a><b>.</b></p>]]></content:encoded>
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    <itunes:author>Sharon</itunes:author>
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    <pubDate>Wed, 07 Jan 2026 18:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
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